Publication | Closed Access
Negative Political Ads and Negative Citizen Orientations toward Politics
51
Citations
92
References
2000
Year
Negative Political AdvertisingTargeted AdvertisingPolitical ProcessNegative Political AdsPublic OpinionPolitical BehaviorSocial SciencesManagementOnline AdvertisingPolitical CommunicationPolitical CognitionElection ForecastingPolitical AdvertisingMarketingAdvertisingPolitical CompetitionPolitical AgendaPolitical Self-efficacyPolitical Science
Abstract This study examines the effects of negative political advertising on responses to a Senate and a gubernatorial race. Responses measured include: (1) knowledge about each race; (2) knowledge about a civics training media campaign; (3) confidence in knowledge about the races; (4) mood responses; (5) political cynicism; (6) political self-efficacy; and (7) voting behavior. The survey findings suggest that negative ads are associated with negative feelings toward the political races, the state, and the country; higher political cynicism; and lower perception of political self-efficacy. Implications of these findings for policy concerning political advertising are discussed.
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